The President's Working Group on Financial Markets released its analysis on the subprime mortgage meltdown. A lot of the analysis falls under the "Well duh..." category, but it's an interesting overview of the entire mess.The comments, like most Internet political cesspools, is full of the usual far left, far right dribble pinning blame on their enemies and favorite targets while calling for the election of what they view as their own flawless candidates. However, it does raise an interesting question of just how responsible the current administration is for the whole mess. I'm not a financial markets expert, so I'm kind of curious as to whether or not these sorts of shady lending practices are something that a typical executive branch agency should have caught and reigned in early on or if this is merely another case of the "irrational exuberance" we find in bubbles. Is this a case of a slack administration who let capitalism go wild or of markets caught up in the quick and easy profits of the real estate boom and blew things up before anyone could have found out? For every sad case of a poor family being booted out of their home is one of a speculator who got burned and simply dumped the property. Thoughts?http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/03/13/AR2008031301887.html
3/13/2008 3:48:31 PM
can you bold any parts you think are interesting?
3/13/2008 4:32:21 PM
3/13/2008 5:01:33 PM
If more people read unbolded articles, we probably wouldn't have such a problem with the economy right now...
3/14/2008 12:28:45 AM
3/14/2008 12:59:13 AM
3/14/2008 1:37:05 AM
Its ironic that the Fed is bailing out institutions that gave away loans to bad candidates and yet we're perfectly willing to let people who are defaulting on those very loans to take the brunt of the damage (and blame).
3/14/2008 2:46:30 AM
3/14/2008 9:18:43 AM
3/14/2008 9:24:56 AM
[Words - But you need to read all of them, otherwise you're wasting your time on this]http://www.nytimes.com/2008/03/19/business/19leonhardt.html?_r=1&hp=&pagewanted=print&oref=slogin
3/19/2008 8:44:45 PM
3/19/2008 9:11:49 PM
^^ I like the article. Wall Street really dug itself into a hole with this one, getting greedy as it did. While I'm not a big fan of bailouts, preferring to let weak and stupid companies collapse, I do understand the reasoning behind the Bear Stearns "bailout". As distasteful as it may have been, the alternative would probably have been much more horrific.
3/22/2008 12:35:11 AM
^^^ I didn't read any of that, but I'm going to assume that it says a soft landing is better than Japanese-style deflation.
3/22/2008 12:58:19 AM
3/22/2008 11:42:55 PM